Policy & Practice February 2018

“We need to focus on the person, and they don’t come in pieces the way we are often organized to serve.” —Paul Fleissner, Director, Olmsted County Community Services

R odney Adams, Director, Department of Community Resources in Mecklenburg County, NC, shared how the department has developed a more community-based model for government operations. To reconstitute how they bring services to the community, they are realigning services to be in the community and interact with the locals, admit- ting, “we don’t have all the answers and solutions, but we can get there collectively.” Adams facilitates the integration of public health, child support, veterans, and social services with local civic leaders and nonprofits, opening six centers in neighborhoods to operate as a part of the commu- nity. “When we talk about sharing resources, people feel threatened, but we have tenacious leadership com- mitted to changing the way we work on the ground together,” he noted. To support the activity and focus, they are working with partners to develop a system to converge data for a local view to better inform decisions “on the ground.” Before getting to a point where they could have a shared system, they needed a shared envi- ronment—to create relationships and trust in neighborhoods and between the groups involved in serving com- munity members. It’s not enough to have a network of partners all focused on a shared person or group such as a family. A generative ecosystem—one that drives sustainable outcomes—also needs to have a strategy and a culture. At the summit, we talked about three elements of a generative ecosystem strategy: � Social: Targeted and measured outcomes that are consciously shared, such as a safer community with metrics around reducing crime; Developing a Strategy for a Generative Ecosystem

emerging area of focus for grants and public funding, for example, and in health care as seen in the next example. Organizations working through this type of strategy include the New Mexico Human Services Department, which is on a journey to reframe its Medicaid program. Health care, in general, is undergoing a transition from fee for service (e.g., doctors get paid when someone visits the office) to value-based care (e.g., networks of doctors or therapists getting paid based on the results of the care they provide). To drive this kind of care, the health care industry needs to center on patients and put people at the core. People’s health and well- being, the effectiveness of care, is not just dependent on the care plan of the patient, but also on the individual’s environment. For example: Can the person get to a doctor’s appointment for follow up? Do they live in a house with others or are they alone? It’s not just about health but also about human services. For New Mexico, Brent Earnest, Cabinet Secretary, described how they put the patient at the center of Medicaid reform and took a view to work across H/HS to create an organizational and technical infra- structure centered around people. They are working through questions about how to understand the needs of individuals, what data they have or how to fill the gaps, how to mobilize Medicaid recipients, as well as how to change flexibly with policies and regulations. Bottom line: They have developed an ecosystem around the intent to increase health and medical outcomes and reduce the cost of health care by considering people in the system—their social, economic, and environmental characteristics, all of which have an impact on the status and cost of their health.

� Technological: Technology such as software and machine learning for capturing and analyzing data for patterns, alerts, and transaction processing; use of technology that is not the “end” but the “means” to achieving impact, as seen in the example of Mecklenburg County first coming together in partnership, then looking at the technology; � Economic: Evidence-based valua- tion models and pay for success—an

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